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The mission of this world renowned medical institution
is to bring better health care to people around the world. |
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| In 1873, Johns Hopkins Medicice was born, founded by Hopkins' donation, the largest sum ever to have been donated in U.S. history. The hospital was a pioneer in forming an integral relationship between research and clinical work, and to this day a total of 31 Nobel Prize winners have come from its research division. |
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| A worldwide network |
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| In addition to 3 inpatient hospitals, John Hopkins possesses an outpatient center and university, and has affiliates in governments, universities and hospitals in 30 countries, including Singapore and Turkey. The mission of this world renowned medical institution is to bring better health care to people around the world. |
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Johns Hopkins Medicine Internation is the international department of Johns Hopkins Medicine,
and works toward the improvement of worldwide medical technology. |
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| Partnership with Tokyo Midtown Medical Center |
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| World-class level healthcare services will be realized through close partenership and activities such as: quarterly quality checks from the US headquarters, lectures by reknown doctors, sharing of a medical information database, and the establishment of a referral route to the US headquarters. |
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| Located |
Baltimore, Maryland, USA |
| Founded |
1889 |
| Numerical data from 2005 |
2,371 doctors(full-time) |
| 1,564 beds (includes affiliated hospitals) |
| 68,781 surgeries (includes affiliate hospitals) |
| 1,888,178 outpatientsoutpatients |
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Daniel Nathans |
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Nobel Prize winner for Physiology or Medicine in 1978 |
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Robert Montgomery |
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World authority in nephrology and organ transplants |
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Richard Axel |
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Nobel Prize winner for Physiology or Medicine in 2004 |
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Arnall Patz |
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World authority in child ophthalmology |
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John Bartlett |
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World authority on HIV |
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